首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
We studied the effect of caffeine on voluntary and electrically stimulated contractions of the adductor pollicis muscle in five adult volunteers. Caffeine (500 mg) was administered orally in a double-blind fashion. Electrical stimulation of the ulnar nerve was performed at 10, 20, 30, 50, and 100 Hz before and after a sustained voluntary contraction held at 50% of the maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). A brief tetanus at 30 Hz was also performed to calculate relaxation rate in the fresh muscle. Contractile properties, relaxation rate, and endurance were then assessed after caffeine and placebo, as well as the response of the fatigued muscle to different frequencies of stimulation. There was no difference in the maximal tension obtained with electrical stimulation (T100) or in the MVC between placebo and caffeine. The tensions developed with electrical stimulation at lower frequencies increased significantly with caffeine ingestion, shifting the frequency-force curve to the left, both before and after fatigue. Mean plasma caffeine concentration associated with these responses was 12.2 +/- 4.9 mg/l. We conclude that caffeine has a direct effect on skeletal muscle contractile properties both before and after fatigue as demonstrated by electrical stimulation.  相似文献   

2.
Tension responses to ramp shortening of varying speed in whole muscle or single fibres from the plateau of an isometric tetanus, revealed at least two distinct phases. There was a fast initial drop in tension followed by a change of slope and a definite inflexion on the tension record. As the velocity of the imposed length change was increased, the inflexion point appeared at a lower tension. Similar inflexions were not observed during ramp releases to an elastic band or a segment of semitendinosus tendon. The tension records obtained with moderately fast ramp length changes to contracting muscle reflect the T1 and T2 phases of the tension transients.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate the roles of cross-bridge dissociation and cross-bridge-induced thin filament activation in the time course of muscle relaxation, we initiated force relaxation in single myofibrils from skeletal muscles by rapidly (approximately 10 ms) switching from high to low [Ca(2+)] solutions. Full force decay from maximal activation occurs in two phases: a slow one followed by a rapid one. The latter is initiated by sarcomere "give" and dominated by inter-sarcomere dynamics (see the companion paper, Stehle, R., M. Krueger, and G. Pfitzer. 2002. Biophys. J. 83:2152-2161), while the former occurs under nearly isometric conditions and is sensitive to mechanical perturbations. Decreasing the Ca(2+)-activated force preceding the start of relaxation does not increase the rate of the slow isometric phase, suggesting that cycling force-generating cross-bridges do not significantly sustain activation during relaxation. This conclusion is strengthened by the finding that the rate of isometric relaxation from maximum force to any given Ca(2+)-activated force level is similar to that of Ca(2+)-activation from rest to that given force. It is likely, therefore, that the slow rate of force decay in full relaxation simply reflects the rate at which cross-bridges leave force-generating states. Because increasing [P(i)] accelerates relaxation while increasing [MgADP] slows relaxation, both forward and backward transitions of cross-bridges from force-generating to non-force-generating states contribute to muscle relaxation.  相似文献   

4.
We report the first time-resolved x-ray diffraction studies on tetanized intact single muscle fibers of the frog. The 10, 11, 20, 21, 30, and Z equatorial reflections were clearly resolved in the relaxed fiber. The preparation readily withstood 100 1-s duration (0.4-s beam exposure) tetani at 4 degrees C (less than 4% decline of force and no deterioration in the 10, 11 equatorial intensity ratio at rest or during activation). Equatorial intensity changes (10 and 11) and fiber stiffness led tension (t1/2 lead 20 ms at 4 degrees C) during the tetanus rise and lagged during the isometric phase of relaxation. These findings support the existence of a low force cross-bridge state during the rise of tetanic tension and isometric relaxation that is not evident at the tetanus plateau. In "fixed end" tetani lattice expansion occurred with a time course similar to stiffness during the tetanus rise. During relaxation, lattice spacing increased slightly, while the sarcomere length remained isometric, but underwent large changes after the "shoulder" of tension. Under length clamp control, lattice expansion during the tetanus rise was reduced or abolished, and compression (2%) of the lattice was observed. A lattice compression is predicted by certain cross-bridge models of force generation (Schoenberg, M. 1980. Biophys. J. 30:51-68; Schoenberg, M. 1980. Biophys. J. 30:69-78).  相似文献   

5.
Twitch potentiation and caffeine contractures in isolated rat soleus muscle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
1. Electrically-evoked twitch and tetanic tension were measured in isolated rat soleus muscle after exposure to caffeine. 2. Between 0.01 and 2.5 mM caffeine twitch tension was potentiated, reaching a peak of 150% of Resting Tension at 0.5 mM. 3. Biphasic Tension development with relaxation was observed at 2.5 mM caffeine with maximal contractures (110% tetanic tension) occurring at 20 mM. 4. Creatine phosphate and ATP stores were maintained throughout the period of tension development and relaxation. 5. In contrast with amphibian muscle, the isolated soleus is very sensitive to low doses of caffeine and produces biphasic caffeine contractures which relax in the presence of caffeine.  相似文献   

6.
Isolated trabeculae of rabbit and guinea pig atrium exposed to low-sodium solution developed after-contractions and increased diastolic tension when rhythmic steady-state stimulation was stopped. Single excitation applied during rest or at the peak of after-contraction brought the resting tension to the low, control level. Tension of isolated cat papillary muscle increased due to action of 17 mmol of caffeine applied during rest was reduced during rhythmic post-rest stimulation. Early extra-excitation potentiated relaxation of atrial muscle exposed to low-sodium solution. It is concluded that relaxing factor of cardiac muscle is activated by excitation of the cell.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of changing muscle length on the mechanical properties of 89 motor units from adult cat medial gastrocnemius have been studied in eight experiments. Few differences were found between the effects of length on tetanic tension, twitch tension, twitch-tetanus ratio, twitch contraction time, twitch half relaxation time, rate of force development and electrical activity for fast contracting (twitch contraction time less than or equal to 45 msec) and slowly contracting (greater than 45 msec) units. Those differences that did appear did not persist when these two groups were matched by tetanic tension. It is concluded that the biophysical mechanisms responsible for the changes in mechanical and electrical properties with length must be similar for fast and slow twitch units and not related to potential differences in their muscle fiber type. The effects of changing muscle length on the mechanical properties of the eight whole muscles suggest that changes in force output with length are of minor importance during normal movements as the muscle is found to be electrically active over a relatively narrow range of lengths close to the optimum length for tetanus of the whole muscle. The very shortest muscle lengths at which there is only minimal force development are not used in natural movements, while the declining limb of the length tension curve is at muscle lengths beyond the maximum in situ length.  相似文献   

8.
The relation between sarcomere length, tension and time course of tension development in twitch and tetanic contractions at 20 degrees C was determined for isolated fibres from the semitendinosus muscle of the frog (Rana esculenta). In twenty fibres at about 2.15 micron sarcomere length, the peak twitch tension, the maximum tetanic tension and the twitch/tetanus ratio ranged, respectively, from 0.22 to 1.6 kg/cm2, from 2.13 o 3.96 kg/cm2 an from 0.07 to 0.53. The peak twitch tension was found to be: i) directly correlated with the twitch/tetanus ratio and the time to the peak of the first derivative of the twitch tension, ii) inversely correlated with the time to the peak of the first derivative of tetanic tension. No significant correlation was found between the maximal tetanic tension and the peak twitch tension or the twitch/tetanus ratio. Peak twitch tension and twitch/tetanus ratio were not correlated with the fibre cross-sectional area which ranged from 1.052 to 6,283 micron2. Sarcomere length-tension curves for twitch and tetanic isometric contractions at 20 degrees C were determined in twelve fibres. Increases in sarcomere length from about 2.15 to 2.85 micron produced, depending on the peak twitch tension or the twitch/tetanus ratio at about 2.15 micron, either decrease and no change or increase in peak twitch tension, but constantly enhanced the twitch/tetanus ratio and the degree of this potentiation was inversely correlated with the twitch/tetanus ratio at 2.15 micron. Increase in sarcomere length above 2.15 micron did not alter the course of the early development of twitch and tetanic tensions, reduced considerably the variation in peak twitch tension and twitch/tetanus ratio, without altering that of tetanic tension and swamped the correlation between the peak twitch tension and the time to peak of the differentiated twitch tension. However, the peak twitch tension at about 2.85 micron resulted to be directly correlated with the peak twitch tension at about 2.15 micron and in addition the relative length-dependent change in the time of the peak of the first derivative of the twitch tension resulted to be directly correlated with the relative length-dependent change in the peak twitch tension. It is concluded that both the duration of the active state and the rate factors of activation contribute to the determining of the large variation in peak twitch tension at about 2.15 micron, whereas the length-dependent increase in twitch/tetanus ratio appears to be mainly determined by prolongation of the active state duration.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of 21 days voluntary leg (plaster) immobilization on the mechanical properties of the triceps surae have been studied in 11 young female subjects, mean age 19.4 years. The results show that during the period of immobilization the mean time to peak tension (TPT) and half relaxation time (1/2RT) and tension (Pt) of the maximal twitch increased significantly (p less than 0.001) but the effects were short lived. Maximal tension and contraction times of the twitch recovered within 2-14 days following the removal of the plaster cast. The electrically evoked tetanic tensions at 10 Hz and 20 Hz did not change significantly (P greater than 0.1) during immobilization, but the 50 Hz tetanic tension (Po50) and maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) were reduced (p less than 0.05). The fall in Po50 and MVC was associated with 10% decrease in the estimated muscle (plus bone) cross-sectional area. The relative (%) change in Po50 and MVC following immobilization was related to the initial physiological status (as indicated by the response of the triceps surae to a standard fatigue test prior to immobilization) of the muscle. The rate of rise and recovery fall of the tetanus were slightly but significantly (p less than 0.01) reduced on day 7 of immobilization, but thereafter remained constant. The isokinetic properties of the triceps surae as reflected in the measured torque/velocity relation of the muscle in 4 subjects did not change significantly if account was taken of the slight degree of atrophy present following immobilization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The time course of fused tetani of three main types of motor units: slow (S), fast resistant (FR) and fast fatigable (FF) was studied in the rat medial gastrocnemius. The rate of tension generation and of the relaxation within a tetanus was measured under isometric conditions. These measurements were performed at three points during both the contraction and relaxation: the beginning, the middle and the end of the phase of changes in tension. Significant differences were found in the rate of tension changes between fast and slow units. Comparison of FF and FR units showed less pronounced differences in their rates of the contraction and the relaxation. Moreover, slow units showed significantly greater slowing of both the contraction and relaxation within a tetanus in relation to the speed of their twitch when compared to fast motor units. The rate of changes in tetanic tension correlated to twitch time parameters and to tension generated during twitch or tetanus. The results point out that the well known difference in the speed of twitch contraction between fast and slow units is also visible in their fused tetani.  相似文献   

11.
Denervated amphibian muscle does not show the prolongation of action potential found in mammalian denervated muscle. It was, therefore, predicted that denervated amphibian muscle would not show prolongation of the mechanical twitch. The sartorius muscles in one leg of toads--Xenopus borealis--were denervated for 140-268 days. Isometric twitch time to peak, time to half relaxation and twitch/tetanus ratio were not changed following denervation, confirming our prediction. Twitch tension decreased to 68% and tetanic tension decreased to 75% of control values. The maximum velocity of unloaded shortening (muscle length/s) was also unchanged.  相似文献   

12.
A myothermal technique was used to measure initial heat and tension independent heat from isometrically contracting papillary muscles taken from the right ventricle of rabbits. Tension independent heat produced by the muscle at Lo was isolated with a 2,3-butanedione monoxime (diacetyl monoxime)--hyperosmotic Krebs solution. The effects of the inotropic drugs isoproterenol (1 X 10(-7) M), UDCG 115 (2 X 10(-4) M), and caffeine (2 X 10(-3) M) on heat and mechanical output were measured. We tested the hypothesis that these drugs alter peak twitch tension by increasing the total amount of Ca2+ cycled during the twitch, assuming that net tension independent heat is proportional to total Ca2+ cycled. The hypothesis was rejected for each drug as the positive inotropic effects of isoproterenol and UDCG 115 on twitch tension were not accompanied by increases in net tension independent heat. Net tension independent heat was actually depressed by UDCG 115. The negative inotropic effect of caffeine on twitch tension was accompanied by an increase in tension independent heat at times between the end of mechanical relaxation and the next stimulus. Possible mechanisms to account for these results are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
A modified automatic freezing apparatus (K. M. Kretzschmar and D. R. Wilkie, 1962, J. Physiol. (London), 202, 66–67) was used for studying light chain phosphorylation during the early phase of contraction of the fast, posterior latissimus dorsi, and slow, anterior latissimus dorsi, muscles of chicken at 37 °C. The frozen muscles were worked up under conditions which avoid artifacts in quantitating the level of light chain phosphorylation in contracting and resting muscles. The posterior latissimus dorsi muscle reached 80% of its maximal isometric tension at 0.1 s of tetanic stimulation. At the same time, light chain phosphorylation increased by 60% of its maximal extent. The peak tension of the posterior muscle at 0.2 s of stimulation was accompanied by maximal light chain phosphorylation. In case of the slow anterior latissimus dorsi muscle, maximal tetanic tension was developed in 2.5 – 5 s and light chain phosphorylation also proceeded at a much slower rate than in the fast posterior muscle. When contralateral posterior latissimus dorsi muscles were stimulated for 0.2 s and one muscle was frozen at the height of tetanus while the other muscle was allowed to relax and frozen 0.4 s after terminating the stimulation, both contracted and relaxed muscles exhibited maximal light chain phosphorylation. However, when the muscle was allowed to relax for 0.8 s before freezing, half of the phosphorylated light chain became dephosphorylated. The resting level of phosphate content of the light chain was restored in both the posterior and anterior muscles during a longer time after relaxation.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of pretreatment with caffeine on Ca2+ release induced by caffeine, thymol, quercetin, or p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid (pCMPS) from the heavy fraction of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) were studied and compared with those effects on caffeine contracture and tetanus tension in single fibers of frog skeletal muscle. Caffeine (1-5 mM) did induce transient Ca2+ release from SR vesicles, but subsequent further addition of caffeine (10 mM, final concentration) induced little Ca2+ release. Ca2+ release induced by thymol, quercetin, or pCMPS was also inhibited by pretreatment with caffeine. In single muscle fibers, pretreatment with caffeine (1-5 mM) partially reduced the contracture induced by 10 mM caffeine. However, tetanus tension was almost maximally induced by electrical stimulus in caffeine-treated fibers. These results indicate that SR, which becomes less sensitive to caffeine, thymol, quercetin, or pCMPS by pretreatment with caffeine, can still respond to a physiological signal transmitted from transverse tubules.  相似文献   

15.
2H2O (99.8%) Ringer's solution greatly reduces the twitch and tetanus of frog sartorius muscle and, as specially shown here, slows the onset features of the mechanical output of the twitch by: (a) increasing the time (LR) from stimulus to start of latency relaxation; (b) slowing the developmet of the latency relaxation, and (c) greatly decreasing the rate of onset of tension development. These changes reflect effects of 2H2O on excitation-contraction coupling and they represent the critical direct effects of 2H2O on muscle since it does not depress either the action potential or the intrinsic myofibrillar contractility. The increase in LR is attributed to slowed inward electrical propagation in the T-tubule. But the critical effect of 2H2O on frog muscle is to greatly depress mobilization of activator Ca2+. The depression of the Ca2+ mobilization and of its effects on the activation of contraction evidently result from (a) a lowered rate of release of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, as indicated by the slowed development of the latency relaxation, (b) a decreased amount of Ca2+ released in a twitch, and (c) a reduced speed of diffusion of the Ca2+ to the contractile filaments. The depressed mobilization of Ca2+ is apparently the essential cause of 2H2O's general depression of twitch and tetanus output.  相似文献   

16.
Electrical and mechanical changes in immobilized human muscle   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
After forearm fracture, the human thumb was unilaterally immobilized in eight subjects for 6 wk in a standard plaster cast. Changes of contraction properties were studied in the adductor pollicis muscle. The contralateral muscle remained unrestrained and served as control. After immobilization, the maximal voluntary contraction was reduced by 55% (P less than 0.05), and the electrically evoked maximal tetanic contraction (Po) was reduced by 33% (P less than 0.05). The decrease of Po was associated with increased maximal rate of tension development (10%) and decreased maximal rate of tension relaxation (22%). The twitch times to peak and to half relaxation were increased by 16 and 14%, respectively, but the twitch tension (Pt) was not significantly changed and the Pt/Po ratio was increased by 43% after immobilization. The muscle surface action potential presented an increase of its duration (19%) and a decrease of the amplitude and the total area (15 and 26%, respectively). The comparison of the electrical and mechanical alterations recorded during voluntary contractions, and in contractions evoked by electrical stimulation of the motor nerve, suggests that immobilization not only modifies the peripheral processes associated with contraction but also changes central and/or neural command of the contraction. At peripheral sites, it is proposed that the intracellular processes of contraction play the major role in the contractile impairment recorded during immobilization.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of creatine and caffeine supplementation on muscle torque generation and relaxation was investigated in healthy male volunteers. Maximal torque (T(max)), contraction time (CT) from 0.25 to 0.75 of T(max), and relaxation time (RT) from 0.75 to 0.25 of T(max) were measured during an exercise test consisting of 30 intermittent contractions of musculus quadriceps (2 s stimulation, 2 s rest) that were induced by electrical stimulation. According to a double-blind randomized crossover design, subjects (n = 10) performed the exercise test before (pretest) and after (posttest) creatine supplementation (Cr, 4 x 5 g/day, 4 days), short-term caffeine intake (Caf, 5 mg x kg(-1) x day(-1), 3 days), creatine supplementation + short-term caffeine intake (Cr+Caf), acute caffeine intake (ACaf, 5 mg/kg) or placebo. Compared with placebo, Cr shortened RT by approximately 5% (P < 0.05). Conversely, Caf increased RT (+ approximately 10%, P < 0.05), in particular as RT increased because of fatigue. RT was not significantly changed by either Cr+Caf or ACaf. T(max) and CT were similar during all experimental conditions. Initial T(max) was approximately 20% of voluntary maximal isometric contraction force, which was not different between treatments. It is concluded that Caf intake (3 days) prolongs muscle RT and by this action overrides the shortening of RT due to creatine supplementation.  相似文献   

18.
In intact single crayfish muscle fibers and frog semitendinosus muscles we have studied the tension response to sinusoidal length changes in the frequency range of 0.25-133 Hz. By this method we have resolved three processes in the interaction of myosin cross-bridges with actin in fully activated preparations. They are (A) a low-frequency phase advance, (B) a middle-frequency delay, and (C) a high-frequency advance. These processes can be used as probes to study the chemomechanical coupling of contractility. Process (B) represents net power output from the muscle preparation (oscillatory work). With maximal K or caffeine activation of crayfish muscle at 20 degrees C, it decreases to zero in the initial 45 s of maintained tension. Similar results were obtained with frog semitendinosus whole muscles. We interpret this decrease of (B) with time as a gradual decrease in actomyosin ATP-hydrolysis rate.  相似文献   

19.
During the development of force deficits by repeated stretches, velocity-sensitive changes in the extra force produced during and after subsequent stretching has not been studied. In the present study, repeated dorsiflexion of the foot of rats with maximally contracting plantar flexor muscles was performed at two angular velocities [0.87 (slow muscle stretch) and 10.47rads(-1) (fast muscle stretch)] to examine the active force of the muscles during and following dorsiflexion. Dorsiflexion was performed 30 times with a rest period of 3min between the stretches to minimize muscle fatigue. The ability of rat plantar flexor muscles to produce additional force during the stretch was not velocity sensitive. In contrast, repeated dorsiflexion with fast muscle stretches, but not with slow muscle stretches, resulted in an increase in the force decay with time following the stretches (i.e. increased stress relaxation), as indicated by a change in the time constant of force decay during stress relaxation. Apparently, the stress-relaxation of rat plantar flexor muscles is sensitive to angular velocity of ankle movements; repeated fast, but not slow dorsiflexion, alters the stress relaxation process of active skeletal muscles exposed to stretches which create a force deficit. The change in time constant of force decay during stress relaxation in response to a series of repeated stretches might provide information on the sarcomere length distribution in skeletal muscles.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Quantitative ultrastructural and physiological parameters were investigated in three types of muscle fibres ofPerca fluviatilis: white fibres from the m. levator operculi anterior, pink (intermediate) fibres of the m. hyohyoideus and deep red fibres of the m. levator operculi anterior. Times to peak tension and half relaxation times of isometric twitches increased in the mentioned order. The extent of contact between the T system and the sarcoplasmic reticulum and the relative volume and surface area of the terminal cisternae showed an inverse relation with the time to peak tension of the twitch. The maximal isometric tetanic force per unit cross section area was similar for all three investigated types. The inverse relation between the time to peak tension of the twitch and the relative length of contact between T system and SR is in agreement with data obtained for fast- and slow twitch muscle fibres of the carp,Cyprinus carpio L.Abbreviations LOPA musculus levator operculi anterior - HH musculus hyohyoideus - SR Sarcoplasmic reticulum  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号